The Dying Of The Trees

Not only are forests dying rapidly but our food supplies are being affected as well.

Due to the Aerosol spray mixture, soil is contaminated and weakening the forests everywhere. Man made drought in a rainy season. Soil Ph has changed 10 to 12 time toward alkaline, micro organisms killed due to bio available metal contamination.

Dying oak trees is not a new phenomenon. Trees die due to a wide variety of abiotic (non-biological) and biotic (biological) causes. Often death is a result of an interaction of many factors. Abiotic causes can be anthropogenic (human-caused) or natural.

In California’s drought-stricken forests, trees are dying at an “unprecedented” rate, according to officials. The U.S. Forest Service said last month that 102 million treeshave died across the state since 2010, including 62 million dead trees in 2016 alone.

The world is home to over three trillion trees—with almost half of them living in tropical or subtropical forests. There are roughly 400 trees for every human. 12,000 years ago, before the advent of agriculture, Earth had twice as many trees as it does now.

Tree density in primary forests varies from 50,000-100,000 trees per square km, so the math would put this number at 3.5 billion to 7 billion trees cut down each year.